T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1911.1 | Don't know | STAR::BARTH | | Mon Oct 24 1988 13:35 | 5 |
| Cats love to jump and climb. We just let them. I know that
doesn't help you, but we just clean the counters, etc, before
eating and don't worry about it.
Karen, Tristan and Tenzing.
|
1911.2 | Squirt bottle | MILVAX::HUDSON | | Mon Oct 24 1988 13:44 | 6 |
| I'm as guilty as .1. It doesn't bother us but when there is company
it bothers me, unless the company is family or good friends (then
I just try to keep them off, usually with luck). Others have stated
that using a squirt bottle with water works to break the habit you
could try that.
|
1911.3 | Tin Cans? | ATEAM::DOIRON | | Mon Oct 24 1988 14:55 | 8 |
| I don't know if this works but I had read about it somewheres?
Line the counter/table with empty 8oz cans. When they jump up the
cans go flying and it suppose to scare the heck out of them. I
have been meaning to try it but keep forgeting to save the tin cans!
It sounds like it just might work after a couple of times?
Corine
|
1911.4 | In our house... | DRFIX::IVES | | Mon Oct 24 1988 15:13 | 17 |
| I guess I am the exception, I do not let our cats up on the counters
or the dining room table.
When Mocha first came to live with us, he was taught immediately the
house rules. When he disobeyed he got a spanking and a sharp loud
"NO". We had no problem after two weeks. Ming caught on right away
and in less than a week she has learned the house rules.
They are always allowed up on any of the beds, powerroom and bath
room sinks and counters. They have no problem distinguishing what
they can get on and what they can't.
I'm sure many people will disagree with this proceedure, however
they are our cats and our house, and our system works for us.
Barbara
|
1911.5 | Well behaved cat | MEDUSA::BOURGEOIS | | Mon Oct 24 1988 15:29 | 25 |
| Barbara you are not an exception, I do not allow my cat up on the
counters or the table. She knows what she can get up on and what
she can't. I had to discipline her very young because I was living
in an apartment when I first got her and I was not suppose to have
her. BUT what do you do when this little scrawny kitten comes wandering
into your yard looking like it is starving to death! I ahd to hide
her everytime the landlord came to the house. Fortunately she was
shy around strangers so she ran under the bed when someone came
to the door. I had her get all her shots and had her spayed and
she is really filling out and becoming very pretty. From what I
read from your decription of a tortoise, I think that is what she
is. She is very loving and gentle. Her noise was out of joint for
awhile because we got a peekineese(sp) from buddy dog and they hated
each other. She would stay upstairs and sulk. Finally I brought
her down one day and shut the door and let the two of them go at
it because toto my dog hated cats. Well not to go into all the boring
details it took about a week of fgighting before they finally calmed
down, now they sleep together, eat together and chase each other
all over the house. We moved into our own home.
One thing we did try the cans with the dog to see if we could get
her to stop barking when she was out in the yard but it didn't to
any good. Sorry didn't mean to go on and on.
Jan
|
1911.6 | Persistence pays | LASSIE::S_FRASER | Local Area Cat Cluster | Mon Oct 24 1988 16:02 | 11 |
|
I'll agree with the spray bottle method. Our calico learned
very quickly. Tas, the oldest Siamese, is being a bit more
difficult, but I'm still working on it. The hopeful part is
that the kitten knows that what he's doing is wrong, and will
learn eventually that the counters are off-limits.
Good luck,
Sandy
|
1911.7 | I'm lazy !! | CUPMK::TRACHMAN | E.T.'s ZhivagoCats....DTN: 264-8298 | Mon Oct 24 1988 17:12 | 7 |
| I guess I'm lazy - I know that they will do it when I'm not
there, so why chase around after them when I am there. They
are gonna do it anyway. A friend of mine used the cans - he
said that his cats got VERY GOOD at jumping up and not knocking
the cans over !!! Little hairy demons!!
E.T.
|
1911.8 | | CIRCUS::KOLLING | Karen, Sweetie, & Holly; in Calif. | Mon Oct 24 1988 20:21 | 5 |
| Be careful about the "spanking", as their bones are very fragile.
.0, you sound like things are in a bad state? Do you think you
two can adjust to each other, or would it be better to look for
a new home for the kitten?
|
1911.9 | Squirting didn't work for me | WITNES::MACONE | Don't litter. . . . SPAY | Tue Oct 25 1988 08:07 | 9 |
| When we first got Elmo, I tried to teach him to stay off the counters
when I was washing the dishes. He loved to walk through the dirty
dishes and then trot all over the house with hiis spaghetti covered
paws. So, thinking of the squirt gun, I took the sink sprayer,
and blasted him one day. He absolutely loved it!!!!!
Now he gets locked in the bathroom when I do the dishes.
|
1911.10 | Squirting works for both of us! | SALEM::NOYCE | Yellowstone-Yea! Park Service-Nay! | Tue Oct 25 1988 08:25 | 13 |
| We used the squirt gun method on Lucky 6 years ago. We would
hide out of sight(not out of range) and when he jumped up on the
kitchen table he would get blasted. Couple of days and he was cured.
He is fed on one end of the counter but he knows he can never go
past/around the corner to the long part of the counter. Now that
we have an 8 week old Kitten training will start all over again
with the squirt bottle. I use a plant watering bottle. It has
a large quanity bottle, shoots a bigger stream, and shoots 20'
with accuracy. Only problem I've come across is my wife thinks
it funny to shoot it at me when I'm not looking and I'm not even
on the table!! ;-)
Good Luck,
Ken
|
1911.11 | Water bottle works in our house | PAR5::K_CIOFFI | | Tue Oct 25 1988 08:26 | 19 |
| My .02 cents.......These little critters are very smart. My little
guy has us both conditioned. He knows (after many squirts in the face)
what is acceptable behaviour and what isn't. The counters and table
are off limits WHEN I'M AROUND. I know that he's having a grand
old time when I'm not because I see clues of his activities. He's
like a kid. He doesn't realize that something out of place is a
clue to having done something he knows he's not supposed to do.
But you can't scold them after the fact. He knows what the water
bottle means...so much so, that all we do now is hold it up and he
flinches and shakes his head. It's so hard not to laugh at him. So,
bottom line, I think we're both trained!!!! I have learned not
to think about what happens when I'm not there, but concentrate
on making life amiable when I am.
I'm sure that like people, some cats are plain stubborn. You may
need to consider whether this cat is the cat for you. The only
problem is when picking out a cat, you can't tell what he/she will
be like to live with. Sounds like a marriage, doesn't it??
|
1911.12 | If they like the sink give them the tub! | CSSE::MORRELL | | Tue Oct 25 1988 08:53 | 12 |
| I also have tried the squirt gun method, I have a water gun that
you have to cock the gun before it will shoot a stream of water,
and when the little ones hear that cocking noise all four of them
scatter.
But, like you Ken when they do get wet, they come back for more.
And they like they dirty dishes too, so now when I do dishes, I
fill up the bathtub too, and let them play in that water so I can
do the dishes in peace.
Kathy
|
1911.13 | Scared Straight | 21568::SADLER_TEMP | | Thu Oct 27 1988 13:10 | 18 |
| My two were the most inquisitive monsters for the first two weeks.
Then.....
Last week, one of them tried to jump up onto the chest-on-chest
in my bedroom. The jump must not have been within feline olypmic
standards. Whoever did it fell just short of the top, hooked their
claws in the bureau scarf and VOILA! Thump--cat hits floor;
crash--lamp falls behind dresser; caching--loose change all over
bedroom; and the grand finale smasho, tinkle, tinkle,
tinkle--anniversary clock (complete with glass dome) never to tick
again.
The cats have kept a wicked `low' profile since then.
SO, find that unwanted breakable, and place it precariously on the
edge of your cat's favorite aerial perch.
P.S. My mishap was unplanned.
|